I'm rhizophagous: I feed on roots, the roots of words. A root or two
every few hours keep me satiated. Some roots are dense -- they have
sprouted dozens of offsprings, while others have a small family.

With a knowledge of roots, you can often figure out words you've
never seen before. In the same manner, you can use combining forms to
coin words. This week we'll see five words made with combining forms.
The combining forms we'll use are:
rhizo-, zym-, logo-, pluto-, oto-, rhino-, laryngo-, and
-phagous, -urgy, -mania, -latry, -logy.

What are combining forms? You can think of them as Lego (from Danish,
leg: play + godt: well) bricks of language. As the term indicates, a
combining form is a linguistic atom that occurs only in combination with
some other form which could be a word, another combining form, or an affix.
Unlike a combining form, an affix can't be attached to another affix.

rhizophagous

"Let us pause briefly in Alsace, a good observatory and outpost in this
rhizophagous European realm. ... the Alsatians had very specific ways
of using and preparing the tuber."
Madeleine Ferrières; Sacred Cow, Mad Cow: A History of Food Fears;
Columbia University Press; 2006.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:

Since my house burned down / I now own a better view / of the rising moon. -Mizuta Masahide, poet and samurai (1657-1723)